冰的背后:格陵兰岛西南部努纳塔瓦克的考古

Q1 Arts and Humanities Journal of the North Atlantic Pub Date : 2022-01-24 DOI:10.3721/037.006.4203
C. Madsen, A. Lennert
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文介绍了2012-2019年在努纳塔尔瓦克(Nunatarsuaq)进行的考古调查结果。努纳塔尔瓦克是格陵兰岛西南部努普康格尔瓦阿(Nuup Kangerlua)顶端的一个偏远地区,被冰川和Kangersuneq冰峡湾所包围。我们详细分析了努纳塔瓦克的中世纪北欧遗址和定居模式,澄清了之前遗址鉴定的不一致之处,并概述了随后的图勒文化/历史因纽特人活动的特征。根据这些证据,努纳塔尔瓦克和康格尔苏涅克的长期历史生态与现有的关于该地区边缘化的观念相矛盾。事实上,我们发现挪威人的定居点包括三个规模相当大的农场,这些农场都在进行牧场放牧,一组新的14c年代表明,这些活动是挪威西部定居点第一次殖民(公元1000年左右)的一部分,并一直持续到14世纪。我们没有发现证据表明,可能早在公元1200年就开始的小冰期气候恶化,对挪威人在努纳塔瓦克的定居产生了直接影响。挪威人成功的适应策略可能涉及对当地丰富的野生海洋和陆地物种的严重依赖,这些物种也吸引并维持了随后的图勒文化和后来的因纽特人群体。
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Behind the Ice: The Archaeology of Nunatarsuaq, Southwest Greenland
Abstract - Here we present the results of archaeological surveys carried out 2012–2019 in Nunatarsuaq, a remote and little investigated region bordered by glaciers and the Kangersuneq ice-fjord at the head of Nuup Kangerlua, Southwest Greenland. We provide a detail analysis of Nunatarsuaq's medieval Norse sites and settlement patterns, clarify previous site identification inconsistencies, and outline the character of subsequent Thule culture/historic Inuit activities. The long-term historical ecology of Nunatarsuaq and Kangersuneq informed by this evidence contradicts an existing notion of the region's marginality. In fact, we find that the Norse settlement included three sizable farms practicing transhumance, a set of new 14C-dates implying that activities were part of first colonization (ca. AD 1000) of the Norse Western Settlement, and continued into the 14th century. We find no evidence that Little Ice Age climatic deterioration, possibly setting in as early as AD 1200, had an immediate impact on Norse settlement in Nunatarsuaq. Successful Norse adaptation strategies probably involved heavy reliance on the locally abundant wild marine and terrestrial species that also attracted and sustained the subsequent Thule culture and later Inuit groups.
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Journal of the North Atlantic
Journal of the North Atlantic Arts and Humanities-History
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